Panorama of the Ebro

(introduction)

Return to the Battle of the Ebro is a photographic project about Evert Ruivenkamp (1915-1943), who, at the age of twenty-three, volunteered to fight in the Spanish Civil War in 1938 and later recorded the experience in a remarkable diary.

The photographer, Evert de Jonge (1958), is Evert Ruivenkamp's nephew. In 2026 he travelled to the Ebro region, where a bloody battle was fought in 1938 and in which his uncle took part and later wrote an unforgettable account in his diary.

Portrait of Evert Ruivenkamp
Cover of A Dutch Boy at the Ebro
more background information

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Carmen and her family

Carmen and her two sons, Baltasar and Mario, have lived on a farm in La Fatarella since birth. Carmen herself was born in 1939, the final year of the Spanish Civil War.

Vila Seca

14 April 1938:
Rubble, the smell of fire, wounded men, mutilated bodies, the stench of burnt human flesh. You grow used to that too. You get used to it, but you never forget. Near Tarragona the whole group leaves the train and we make our way to Vila Seca. We sleep under the trees for one night. At breakfast there is a handful of hazelnuts. There is nothing more. Perhaps later.
(Evert Ruivenkamp's diary)

Vilella Baixa

19 June 1938:
Last night we were in Vilella Baja.
Carefully avoiding the road, we made our descent. Threading our way between bushes and rocks, we finally reached our destination.
The village was very quiet. At most three or four people were there. We ordered coffee and cognac. Coffee was possible. Cognac, however, was not. It did not sound very convincing. I assumed it had more to do with a ban on selling spirits to soldiers.
(Evert Ruivenkamp's diary)

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The Ebro near Flix

Flix

2 August 1938
We left the camp and crossed the Ebro as well. We set off at six in the evening in three trucks. ... Our aim was not immediate territorial gain. Levante had to be relieved. Now Franco was bringing everything to the Ebro. One hundred, two hundred, three hundred aircraft crossed overhead each day.
(Evert Ruivenkamp's diary)

Trench

6 August:
We lay close together. Bombs were bursting all around us. As best we could, we pressed ourselves against the ground. Between two explosions he looked at me and said nothing, but our eyes understood each other. It is almost unbearable.
We are here to receive the men who can no longer endure it.
As Franz put it: 'Am Ende des Tages sind die Nerven kaputt und bist du fertig'.
(Evert Ruivenkamp's diary)

Cave hospital

Cova de Santa Llucia near La Bisbal de Montsant. In 1938, this cave was used as a field hospital for wounded Republican soldiers. It held around 80 beds and an operating room.

Bullet-ridden wall in Gandesa

Gandesa

17 August 1938:
I will never see Willy de Lathouder again. Theo told me he fell near Gandesa. One says with a bullet through the head, another with a bullet through the stomach. However it happened, his life is over. Worst of all is what lies ahead for his wife, with a little child now almost half a year old. One by one they fall. When will it be my turn?
(Evert Ruivenkamp's diary)

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Memorial de les Camposines

This is part of the Memorial de les Camposines. The photo on the left, cigarette in hand, is Willy de Lathouder.

Ruin with poppies

23 September 1938
Thank God, it is over again and I am still alive. I have never experienced a day like this in all this time. The remnants are moving back to the reserve position. Eleven men are left from our company.
(Evert Ruivenkamp's diary)

Mass grave site near La Fatarella

According to local residents, a mass grave from the Spanish Civil War lies beneath this orchard in La Fatarella.

Trees near the Ebro

The Ebro valley near Gandesa in 2026.

Wounded tree

About Evert Ruivenkamp

In March 1938, Evert Ruivenkamp left The Hague and crossed the Pyrenees on foot to join the democratically elected Spanish Republic as a twenty-three-year-old international volunteer, fighting against Franco's forces, backed by Hitler's Germany and Mussolini's Italy. He first came under fire in early August during the Battle of the Ebro, the bloodiest confrontation of the Spanish Civil War, with 120,000 casualties.

read more about Evert Ruivenkamp

In 2019, eighty years later, Rosa, Evert's sister who was ten years younger than him, died. In her bedside table a diary was found, written by Evert in Spain in 1938. It is a compelling eyewitness account of war and offers a deeply personal view of what Evert lived through.

learn more about the diary
Portrait of Evert Ruivenkamp
Cover of A Dutch Boy at the Ebro

About this photo project

The photographer Evert de Jonge (1958) is Evert Ruivenkamp's nephew and the son of Roos Ruivenkamp. In 2019 he found the diary in the bedside table of his late mother. Struck by this account written by his uncle at the age of twenty-three, he travelled to Catalonia in 2026 to see the landscape where the Battle of the Ebro had unfolded.

learn more about the photo project